Courts sentence scammer to 6 years for operating a billion-dollar Cisco counterfeiting ring

Cal Jeffrey

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In a nutshell: A judge has sentenced the CEO of 19 fraudulent tech firms to six years in prison on conspiracy and fraud charges. The Florida man headed up a scam that sold counterfeit Cisco networking equipment. Authorities estimate the criminal enterprise sold more than a billion dollars worth of gear.

Onur "Ron" Aksoy was arrested and indicted in 2022 on wire and mail fraud and conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud. A year later, Aksoy signed a plea deal to receive a reduced sentence. The judge ordered that he spend the next six years in prison and pay $100 million to Cisco and other victims of his fraudulent dealings.

Aksoy operated 19 online companies under the umbrella corporation Pro Network Entities. The scattering of front firms sold counterfeit networking equipment through sites like eBay and Amazon from 2013 to 2022 under at least 25 storefront aliases. Some of his customers included the US Army, Navy, and Air Force. He also sold gear to other government agencies, schools, hospitals, and private enterprises.

The quality of the fraudulent gear was substandard, suffering poor performance and complete failures after installation. In a Thursday press release, the Department of Justice indicated that Pro Network sourced its devices from China, the top supplier of counterfeit electronics. The devices started life as Cisco rejects. Counterfeiters made a few alterations, created forged documentation, loaded the equipment with authentic but pirated software, and labeled them "refurbished."

In 2014, only a year after Aksoy began selling the knockoff devices, Cisco and law enforcement became aware of the suspicious activity. Cisco sent Pro Network seven cease-and-desist notices, but Aksoy replied with forged invoices using aliases and fake addresses. So, US Customs began seizing shipments destined for the scammer.

Between 2014 and 2022, agents confiscated approximately 180 shipments of fake Cisco equipment. However, Aksoy used fake names and documents to recover many of these seizures. The most concerning aspect of the scheme was its scale and the way it virtually compromised large portions of the US infrastructure.

"Through an elaborate, years-long scheme, Aksoy created and ran one of the largest counterfeit-trafficking operations ever," Attorney for the United States Vikas Khanna for the District of New Jersey. "His operation introduced tens of thousands of counterfeit and low-quality devices trafficked from China into the US supply chain, jeopardizing both private-sector and public-sector users, including highly sensitive US military applications like the support platforms of US fighter jets and other military aircraft."

Despite selling the products at discounts as deep as 94-percent compared to the MRSP of genuine equipment, Aksoy managed to sell at least $1 billion in fake gear. Upon arrest, authorities confiscated another 1,156 devices worth $7 million from Aksoy's warehouse.

Caveat emptor.

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This is quite good. However, he was going after people with money. How about scammers who go after people with little to no money, and no means to fight back? I care little about thefts from banks and corporations, it balances out the broken system, which is a crime no more severe than banks and corporations stealing from people.
 
So after paying the fine, and spending time in jail, he'll still be a millionaire or billionaire depending on how he laundered the money.

The system is working as expected... lol
 
I care little about thefts from banks and corporations, it balances out the broken system, which is a crime no more severe than banks and corporations stealing from people.
What an utterly morally bankrupt position. And short-sighted as well. When someone steals from a corporation, the corporation responds by one or more of the following:

- raising prices on goods to recover the losses
- paying their employees less
- paying less in taxes due to lowered profits
- giving shareholders, including everyone in the country with a 401K, lower returns.

And that doesn't even count the indirect costs of a scheme like this, in which counterfeit equipment could have compromised the security of anything from a major dam or nuclear power plant, down to the operation of a hospital emergency room.

In framing your response, you might do well to explain to us all how Cisco has been "stealing" from you all these years.
 
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At least the corporations have a means to deal with the problem Endymio, the people VitalyT talks about, do not :(
 
Of all the possible components to go cheap on, top secret military sites selected their _network routers_ to buy used and impossibly cheap from a source other than the direct US manufacturer?!?

I know stupid mistakes are the obvious reason and the obvious reason is not to be overlooked, but part of me feels like there has to be more to the story. Is there a common thread between the sites that went for this too good to be true deal? And was profit the only motive, or perhaps more like the cover story?
 
This is quite good. However, he was going after people with money. How about scammers who go after people with little to no money, and no means to fight back? I care little about thefts from banks and corporations, it balances out the broken system, which is a crime no more severe than banks and corporations stealing from people.

This is BS drivel. In fact as far as fraud & scams go, it's the bigger fish - the "banks and corporations" - that get the serious government firepower. Prosecutors were happy to spend sizable investigation and prosecution budgets to take down I.e. Enron, Madoff, FTX, and even this guy. And when the victims are say lots of senior citizens, they get even more motivated. Whereas the corner three card monte scammer is probably just going to get bounced off the sidewalk, or ignored, until he robs the wrong person. In any event no need to judge one scammer against another, they're all garbage and I'd be happy if they were all in jail.

The "its OK if the victim is a business" part is complete BS though.
 
Not ok, but bether than not bizness, and don't forget that this bizness do the same thing if not worse to they customers, the bribes of Intel to OEM, the lies in marketings, thare is many instance of this :( just because for bizness it is "legitimate" does not make it good...but it unfortunately also true that sometimes customers do this to the corporations too (if they can) like fake RMA etc, so yhe, everything is garbo :(
 
The government can almost 100% erradicate the possibility of getting counterfeits if they simply got the equipment DIRECTLY from Cisco! I cannot understand why they would procure from these 3rd party unknown sellers.
 
The government can almost 100% erradicate the possibility of getting counterfeits if they simply got the equipment DIRECTLY from Cisco! I cannot understand why they would procure from these 3rd party unknown sellers.
Cisco doesn't sell directly to businesses or government. You must purchase from a Cisco certified reseller. This man faked paperwork to show his businesses had said certification.
 
Cisco doesn't sell directly to businesses or government. You must purchase from a Cisco certified reseller. This man faked paperwork to show his businesses had said certification.

That's not really an excuse on the government's behalf. I'm sure it has enough purchasing power and/or clout - and certainly the responsibility - to have demanded an exception; or said "fine, the reseller will be the Pentagon Office of Cisco Reselling"; or even used a real third party reseller but treated that third party the same way they do other important private contractor partners, where the validation process is more than looking at a piece of paper.
 
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